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Stephan
Jenkins
–
Vocals,
guitar
Arion
Salazar
–
Bass,
vocals
Tony
Fredianelli
–
Guitar,
vocals
Brad
Hargreaves
-
Drums
“This
album
is
a
beginning,”
says
Third
Eye
Blind’s
Stephan
Jenkins,
of
Out
Of
The
Vein,
the
San
Francisco
quartet’s
first
new
album
in
over
three
years.
“There’s
been
enough
of
a
break
that
it
isn’t
a
continuation.
We’ve
spent
some
time
soul-searching,
getting
back
to
the
nitty
gritty.”
According
to
Stephan,
the
album
sessions
mark
the
start
of
a
creative
period
that
will
generate
several
more
releases,
including
an
EP,
a
live
album
and
an
“unplugged”
album.
“I
think
we’ve
opened
a
vein,
so
to
speak,
and
we’re
going
to
let
it
bleed.”
For
a
band
that
has
always
found
inspiration
in
authenticity
and
a
DIY
ethic,
getting
back
to
that
place
was
essential
to
recording
the
album
the
band
knew
it
could
make.
One
listen
makes
it
clear
they
have
achieved
their
goal.
Out
Of
The
Vein
is
a
diverse
and
powerful
statement
of
where
the
band
is
right
now,
thirteen
songs
full
of
energy,
tension,
contradiction
and
beauty
–
raw
but
lovely,
lush
but
stripped.
It
retains
the
band’s
rock
songcraft,
but
it
also
captures
the
kind
of
jamming
and
improvising
that
happens
when
musicians
become
keenly
tuned
in
to
one
another.
In
the
mid
‘90s,
Third
Eye
Blind
spent
a
couple
of
years
coming
together,
falling
apart
and
coming
together
again,
sleeping
on
floors
and
playing
on
the
barely-existent
San
Francisco
club
scene.
But
as
soon
as
real
opportunity
presented
itself
–
in
the
form
of
their
self-titled
1997
debut
album
with
Elektra
–
they
took
it,
and
took
off.
They
scaled
the
charts
with
the
album
and
its
first
single
“Semi-Charmed
Life”;
they
then
made
clear
their
intention
to
stick
around
by
reeling
off
four
more
undeniable
rock
anthems
--
“Graduate,”
“How’s
It
Going
To
Be,”
“Losing
A
Whole
Year”
and
"Jumper."
The
album
sold
six
million
copies,
and
remained
on
the
Billboard
Top
200
Albums
chart
for
well
over
a
year.
Their
1999
follow-up,
Blue,
approached
double
platinum
on
the
strength
of
the
Stones-inflected
single
“Never
Let
You
Go”
and
a
sold-out
worldwide
tour
that
lasted
a
year.
One
might
construe
three
years
between
albums
to
be
evidence
of
slacking,
but
nothing
could
be
further
from
the
truth.
“We’d
make
more
albums
if
we
didn’t
like
playing
live
so
much,”
declares
Brad
Hargreaves;
Jenkins
adds,
“In
a
way,
I
envy
hip
hop
producers
like
Missy
Elliott,
who
can
stay
home
and
make
more
records.
But
they
miss
out
on
the
intensity
of
the
exchange
with
a
live
audience,
which
I
would
never
give
up.
But
it’s
hectic
and
it’s
crazy,
and
after
two
albums
back
to
back
I
had
to
stop
for
a
year
to
rebuild.”
Upon
coming
off
the
road,
rebuild
they
did,
literally,
constructing
their
own
studio,
right
down
to
a
summer
spent
putting
up
brick
and
sheetrock.
Once
it
was
complete,
the
band
set
up
its
collection
of
vintage
analog
recording
gear,
vital
for
capturing
their
organic
sound.
“I
want
people
to
know
that
this
album
is
homemade,”
says
Stephan.
“Artists
like
Led
Zep
and
Bob
Marley
set
the
sonic
bar
for
music,
for
me.
Our
challenge
is
to
make
music
for
‘now’
that
maintains
the
purity
of
analog
sound.”
In
other
areas,
after
his
mother
was
diagnosed
with
breast
cancer,
Stephan
organized
the
Breathe
Benefit
Concert
in
Los
Angeles,
which
brought
together
a
wide
range
of
artists
to
raise
money
for
breast
cancer
treatment
and
research.
Then
it
came
time
to
hunker
down
and
begin
writing
and
recording
their
new
album.
“The
first
two
albums
were
written
during
times
when
I
didn’t
feel
scrutinized,”
Stephan
relates.
“What
matters
to
me
are
the
unselfconscious
creative
impulses.
It
can
be
a
struggle,
because
I
second-guess
myself,
but
eventually,
I
got
to
the
point
where
I
realize
our
songs
serve
a
purpose
for
me,
they
put
things
into
persepective
for
me.
Only
when
they
work
for
me
do
they
become
eligible
to
do
it
for
someone
else.”
Jenkins
adds,
“It
certainly
wasn’t
writer’s
block.
If
this
was
on
vinyl,
it
would
be
a
double
album.
After
our
hiatus,
we
wanted
to
give
our
audience
a
big
dose.
And
it
was
still
hard
for
us
to
decide
what
to
keep
on
the
album.
So
we
hope
to
release
more
music
from
these
sessions
in
a
short
time.”
Another
part
of
“getting
to
the
nitty
gritty”
involved
simplifying
the
recording
process,
a
task
made
easier
by
working
in
their
new
studio,
with
Stephan
serving
as
producer.
“On
Blue,
we
succumbed
to
the
studio
maybe
more
than
we
should
have,”
Stephan
explains.
“The
best
performances
are
spontaneous
rather
than
a
recital.
It
took
a
while
to
trust
that
again,
to
realize
that
the
first
takes
were
often
the
best.
It’s
OK
to
paint
quickly
and
make
some
mistakes.
It
gives
a
song
and
an
album
a
sense
of
momentum.
So
even
though
it
took
us
a
while
to
do,
much
of
it
was
done
on
the
first
take.”
Says
co-producer
and
bassist
Arion
Salazar,
“In
hindsight
we
felt
Blue
was
unrealized.
So
Stephan
and
I
worked
every
fucking
day,
forever,
to
get
these
songs
where
we
wanted
them
to
be.
I’m
not
whining
–
I’m
happy
to
be
able
to
do
it
–
but
it
was
grueling.
It’s
taken
us
in
so
many
directions,
and
we’re
so
far
removed
from
the
starting
point,
that
we
can
actually
be
objective.
And
now
I
think
we
have
a
great
album.
We’re
proud
of
what
we’ve
done.”
Fans
who
pick
up
Out
Of
The
Vein
early
will
get
to
see
how
the
band
brought
it
all
together
on
a
bonus
DVD
mini-documentary
of
the
making
of
the
album,
called
Hiding
Out,
complete
with
laughs,
fights,
and
other
rock
&
roll
hijinks.
“We
have
no
patience
for
things
that
add
up
to
pretense,”
Stephan
says.
”You
can
see
that
there
isn’t
some
big
team
that’s
Third
Eye
Blind.
It’s
homemade.
It’s
just
us,
doing
it
ourselves.”
The
DVD
also
includes
a
song
that
exists
nowhere
else,
“My
Time
In
Exile,”
that
completes
the
cycle
of
the
album,
in
that
it
is
“an
almost
fond
goodbye
to
a
time
that
actually
seemed
bleak,”
according
to
Stephan.
The
album’s
themes
run
a
gamut
of
life
in
the
present
tense,
from
relationships
when
the
talking
stops,
to
jade-colored
social
observation,
to
the
agoraphobia
of
traveling
alone,
to
rediscovering
the
valuable
things
in
life
--
perhaps
while
flying
to
your
death
on
a
motorcycle.
Out
Of
The
Vein
is
about
how
rock
music
and
narrative
can
put
people,
change
and
ourselves
into
perspective.
Stephan’s
lyrics,
ambiguous
by
design,
refuse
to
do
the
work
of
making
judgements
for
his
audience.
Need,
pain
(often
self-inflicted)
and
loneliness
are
met
with
wit
and
sardonic
humor,
and
from
this
a
joy
emerges.
“’Out
of
the
vein’
has
conflicting
meanings,”
says
Stephan.
“It
means
‘coming
from
the
source,’
true
and
red,
but
it
also
means
‘outside
of
the
source,
outside
the
rhythm.’
It’s
a
line
from
‘Good
Man’:
‘Blood
never
forgets,
but
who
protects
the
memories,
when
we
bleed
each
other
out
of
the
vein.’
Typical
of
the
contradictions
written
into
the
band’s
music,
Stephan
adds,
“I
believe
there’s
a
lot
of
hope
in
the
album,”
while
Arion
offers,
“There’s
definitely
a
bittersweet,
melancholy
vibe.”
The
album’s
many
highlights
include
the
sex-crazed
album
opener
“Faster”;
the
textured,
sweetly
melodic
“Palm
Reader,”
one
of
the
album’s
centerpieces
(“I
like
the
romance
of
things
like
crystal
balls,
tarot
cards
and
horoscopes
even
if
I
don’t
believe
in
them,”
Stephan
says.
“They
search
for
something
exotic
when
communication
has
gone
gray”);
the
raucous,
new
wave-tinged
social
commentary
of
“Danger”;
the
beer
splattered
punk-prog
“Company”;
the
album
closer
“Good
Man”;
and
the
stubborn
intensity
of
the
first
single
“Blinded
(When
I
See
You).”
Another
band
favorite
is
“Self
Righteous,”
featuring
Moldy
Peaches
vocalist
Kimya
Dawson;
the
song
is
described
by
Stephan
as
“a
post-club
chill-out
track”
and
by
Arion
as
“a
slow,
moody,
ethereal,
heroin
jam.”
(Take
your
pick.)
Says
Jenkins,
“It
deals
with
ambiguity
being
sexier
than
things
that
are
clear.
The
lyrics
were
ad-libbed
on
the
first
take.”
Arion
adds,
“It’s
like
nothing
else
we’ve
done.
When
you
hear
your
own
stuff
and
get
choked
up
by
it,
it
means
a
lot.”
Now
that
the
album
is
finally
done,
Stephan,
Arion,
Tony
and
Brad
are
looking
forward
to
the
adrenalin
and
community
that
only
comes
from
playing
to
an
audience.
They
plan
to
spend
much
of
2003
on
the
road,
with
the
first
leg
coming
on
a
32-city
tour
in
April
and
May,
in
advance
of
the
album’s
release.
Sitting
in
the
odd
time-vacuum
between
an
album’s
completion
and
its
release,
Stephan
reflects,
“Since
the
beginning,
we’ve
always
tried
to
do
our
own
thing.
Music
was
a
way
to
have
an
identity.
We
didn’t
fit
into
a
scene,
and
we
still
don’t,
really.
But
we’re
trying
to
do
something
that’s
present,
that
has
an
arc
--
tempos,
time
signatures,
sensibilities
change
from
song
to
song.
I
need
that
from
an
album,
personally,
to
stay
with
it.
The
point
of
our
album
is
to
create
a
world
by
remaking
the
world
for
a
minute,
one
that’s
not
necessarily
escapist,
but
makes
conflicting
things
manageable
for
a
moment.
It’s
something
to
travel
all
the
way
through.”
“I
hope
people
love
it,”
says
Arion.
“I
mean,
on
some
level,
I
don’t
care
what
people
think
because
I
like
it,
but
I
hope
they
like
it,
too.
I
want
it
to
make
people
happy,
but
knowing
that
it
makes
me
happy,
the
rest
is
icing.”
“There’s
definitely
a
pain
quotient
you
have
to
go
through,
if
you
want
it
to
be
right,”
Stephan
concludes.
“And
we’ve
done
it.
Our
suffering
is
complete,
and
so
we
present
to
you
Out
Of
The
Vein.”
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